Starch Intake May be Linked to Breast Cancer Recurrence
Reported December 28, 2011
(Ivanhoe Newswire) – Increased starch intake may be associated with greater risk
for breast cancer recurrence, according to this study.
"The results show that it's not just overall carbohydrates, but particularly
starch," Jennifer A. Emond, M.S., a public health doctoral student at the
University of California, San Diego, was quoted as saying. "Women who increased
their starch intake over one year were at a much likelier risk for recurring."
Researchers conducted a subset analysis of 2,651 women who participated in the
Women's Healthy Eating and Living (WHEL) Dietary Intervention Trial. WHEL
researchers studied breast cancer recurrence and followed the participants for
an average of seven years.
The subset analysis involved an examination of how changes in carbohydrate
intake influenced breast cancer recurrence. "The WHEL dietary trial, even though
it focused on fruits and vegetables, fiber and fat, didn't really have a
specific carbohydrate goal," Emond said.
She and her colleagues obtained carbohydrate intake information from multiple
24-hour dietary recalls at baseline and at one year. In an annual phone
interview, participants reported everything they had eaten during the last 24
hours.
At baseline, carbohydrate intake was 233 grams per day. Results showed that
women whose cancer recurred had a mean increase in carbohydrate intake of 2.3
grams per day during the first year, while women whose cancer did not recur
reported a mean decrease of 2.7 grams per day during the first year.
Starches were particularly important, Emond said. Changes in starch intake
accounted for 48 percent of the change in carbohydrate intake. Mean change in
starch intake during the first year was 0.1 grams per day among women whose
cancer recurred vs. 0.7 grams per day among women whose cancer did not recur.
When change in starch intake during one year was grouped into quartiles of
change, the rate of an additional breast cancer event was 9.7 percent among
women who decreased their starch intake the most during one year, compared with
an event rate of 14.2 percent among women who increased their starch intake the
most during one year.
The change in starch intake was "independent of dietary changes that happened in
the intervention arm," Emond explained. "It is independent of more global
changes in diet quality."
After stratifying patients by tumor grade, Emond and colleagues found that the
increased risk was limited to women with lower-grade tumors.
These results show the need for more research on dietary recommendations that
consider limited starch intake among women with breast cancer.
SOURCE: the 2011 CTRC-AACR San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium held in San
Antonio, Texas from December 2011
|